Example sentences of "to go [prep] an [adj] [noun] " in BNC.

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1 For a bigger event , it is always better to go for an empty room that allows you scope to do your own thing rather than a place which has limiting fixed features .
2 Young was later to go through an Engels-like change of heart , though it was clear that he was sceptical from the start ( see his contribution to Taylor , Walton and Young , 1975 ) .
3 It was n't just that Major appeared to have accepted a dare to go through an entire broadcast without offering a single specific incentive of any kind for people to vote for him , but Brunson , an experienced broadcaster , was even odder .
4 Phillips was first to go after an off-the-ball incident that escaped the attention of most people in the ground .
5 I asked Joyce what aspect of her phobia she felt still remained and she said that she would like to be able to go into an open space such as a park , where there were likely to be many more birds around .
6 If they choose to go into an independent sector home , they , and they have a low level of income , they do access what is called the residential care allowance , which is further income support benefit of up to forty five pound a week .
7 In order to conserve online storage space , it is possible to nominate packages to go into an offline state .
8 She gestured for him to go with an indifferent wave of her hand .
9 Colin Stephens added the conversion to go with an earlier penalty for a 10-0 lead .
10 It 's best to go with an organised group if you want to cycle or paddle your way through the area .
11 Gate , now the game 's official historian , has written a typically well researched text to go with an excellent collection of illustrations and cartoons .
12 He even asked the taxi driver to go via an off licence .
13 Where it breaks down and you get a governing body that is split down the middle , where you get staff who tend to who might tend to go in an opposite way to the head teacher , where you get parents who are asked to make difficult decisions as with an opt out ballot , then I think that you have to look very hard at the way that that school is managed and the way that it 's going in the future , because those are the sort of issues that unless you get those right the future for the school can not be as bright as it is for one where they are working as a team .
14 It is extremely important to go to an experienced breeder with a proven track record ; he will have seen the litter every day and will know each pup 's individual character , faults and virtues .
15 I said I wanted him to go to an outside hospital , so they took him .
16 Where you know so as not to have to risk going having to go to an expensive B and B because all the cheap places have gone .
17 It also means that there is no longer a need to go to an expensive design company or advertising agency to produce company stationery , direct mail material or even sophisticated brochures .
18 Now she did n't want to go to an expensive restaurant in the West End .
19 In return , France says it will allow a dispute about fish and maritime boundaries around its islands of St Pierre and Miquelon , off the Newfoundland shore , to go to an international tribunal .
20 Most burglars prefer to go to an empty house and elderly people tend to be at home all day .
21 she used to go to an old person 's home of a night time you know
22 But the fee is still likely to go to an independent tribunal with Forest apparently asking £3m for their former manager 's son .
23 We 're in a transmat booth , and we 're about to go on an instant journey . ’
24 While MICHAEL PALIN goes Pole to Pole , ZODIAC MINDWARP and enigmatic KLF mastermind BILL DRUMMOND have decided to go on an Arctic adventure all of their own and without the help of special medication …
25 This no nonsense guide is good for those wanting to go on an interesting selection of gentle walks .
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